The week in wildlife - in pictures

The week in wildlife - in pictures

A ladybird spider moving house and a baby rhino having a mud bath are among this week's pick of images from the natural world

Friday 12 August 2011 10.34 EDT
First published on Friday 12 August 2011 10.34 EDT

A baby stingray at the Sea Life London Aquarium. Staff were surprised to discover two female stingrays were both expecting young as they had not been in contact with a male for almost two years. Seven healthy stingrays were born

A flamingo chick runs on the Fuente de Piedra lake, Spain, during a tagging and control operation of flamingo chicks to monitor the evolution of the species. The lake, which is the most important breeding ground for flamingos in the Iberian peninsula, is also a nature reserve and a haven for birds with over 170 different species recorded

A raccoon in the US, where most rabies cases before 1960 were in domestic animals, but today more than 90% of all animal cases reported annually occur in wildlife, most frequently in raccoons, bats, skunks and foxes

A loggerhead turtle reaches the water after making its way across the sandy beach towards the sea at Gnejna Bay, in the north of Malta. Beachgoers have been urged to report
endangered leatherback turtle sightings

Aherd of Asiatic wild elephants gather at a national park in Minneriya, Sri Lanka. Thousands of wildlife officials and volunteers have taken up positions on treetop huts near reservoirs and watering holes for Sri Lanka's first national count of its dwindling wild elephant population. Sri Lankan wildlife activists have
boycotted wild elephant census

A
rare ladybird spider in its man-made home in an old old plastic bottle at Clouds Hill in Dorset, which will be used to transport it to the RSPB's Arne reserve in Dorset to help them breed. The bottles have been filled with heather and moss and captured spiders placed inside and monitored while they settled in and made their webs

European bisons rest in a reserve in the former military zone at Ralsko, near Mimon town, a site occupied by Soviet forces from 1968 to 1991. European bison have returned to the Czech Republic after more than a century, as five animals from neighbouring Poland make their home in a former military zone occupied by the Soviets

Scientists taking part in the first ever survey of seaweed to span the length of the East Coast of England have discovered a variety of species new to the region, including this unidentified purple sponge, which was discovered off Sheringham in Norfolk by the Seaweed East surveyors. It is new to the UK and possibly to science. A total of 131 species have been collected to date, including four non-native species to the UK. All seaweeds collected from both shore and dive surveys will be pressed and scanned, producing an East Coast collection that will be available to view online once complete

This starlet sea anemone is a Biodiversity Action Plan species. The Seaweed East team recorded them off the East Anglian coast. This image was taken at Orfordness, Suffolk. The Seaweed East survey involved a team of surveyors, including renowned marine biologists, seasearch divers, a botanist and a wild food expert, exploring 11 locations from Essex to Northumberland between 1 and 10 August